The Vinous-throated Parrotbill is a tiny
(12cm) bird with a long tail and a very small parrot-like bill, as its name
indicates. Its crown and wings are rufous brown, and its back and tail are
grayish brown. Its throat is whitish with very fine rufous streaks, and its
underparts are tinted rufous-buff. Its iris is brown, its bill grayish and
its legs and feet pinkish-gray. The Vinous-throated Parrotbill lives in
active flocks and prefers scrub, thickets and forest edges. Its calls
consist of very soft chirping, which is almost continuous in feeding flocks.

The Vinous-throated Parrotbill eats insects
and small fruits and seeds. The Taiwan subspecies bulomachus is a
richer, brighter rufous on the crown compared to birds of the mainland. It
is a common resident year-round in
Taiwan.

References: A Field
Guide to the Birds of China (Mackinnon and Phillipps); 100 Common Birds of
Taiwan (Wild Bird Society of Taipei); N. J. Collar, “Endemic
subspecies of Taiwan birds—first impressions”, in Birding ASIA, Number 2,
December 2004